That's an interesting viewpoint. Here we have living proof, of a fully functioning, coherent, alive poster with good (but low to you) cholesterol. What would you have expected to have failed in a person with the levels stated? Brain? Netves? Digestion?Although a very low cholesterol level should have no impact on your diabetic status it is somewhat concerning as cholesterol is part of the natural working of the body and I really don't understand why it is considered a good thing to keep it artificially low.
Essential parts such as the brain and nerves are made from lipids, so interfering with the availability - cholesterol is the transport system for fats, is - to my way of thinking, just asking for trouble. Fats are involved in making digestive fluids and hormones too so I think you are wise to have discontinued the tablets.
There is no way to know.That's an interesting viewpoint. Here we have living proof, of a fully functioning, coherent, alive poster with good (but low to you) cholesterol. What would you have expected to have failed in a person with the levels stated? Brain? Netves? Digestion?
My money's on brain. Doesn't have to HAVE FAILED. Just raise riskThat's an interesting viewpoint. Here we have living proof, of a fully functioning, coherent, alive poster with good (but low to you) cholesterol. What would you have expected to have failed in a person with the levels stated? Brain? Netves? Digestion?
There is no way to know.
Hopefully Keith 8 felt fine with his natural levels of cholesterol and was OK with his artificially lowered levels and also with whatever levels he has now he decided to stop taking the tablets - I just don't understand the reasoning behind prescribing statins in such circumstances
That's one massive assumption. How many tests did you do to establish this ? Body dysfunctions don't all symptomise overnight. Some take years. Some are only discovered on autopsy.Here we have living proof, of a fully functioning ...
Cause and effect.My money's on brain. Doesn't have to HAVE FAILED. Just raise risk
"in a group of more than 29,000 Finns studied, low total cholesterol put men at greater risk of being hospitalized for major depression. A link between low cholesterol and depression has turned up in at least half a dozen other studies."
http://www.webmd.com/men/features/can-your-cholesterol-be-too-low-feature#2
I'm no expert, so don't ask me any more questions. I simply googled 'damage from low cholesterol'. Others can read the search results ad libitum. Google and cholesterol are your friends. High triglycerides are your enemy.
Geoff
I hope we aren't planning an autopsy for the op yet.That's one massive assumption. How many tests did you do to establish this ? Body dysfunctions don't all symptomise overnight. Some take years. Some are only discovered on autopsy.
Geoff
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?